The long-term outcomes of heroin dependent-treatment-resistant patients with bipolar 1 comorbidity after admission to enhanced methadone maintenance.

J Affect Disord

Vincent P. Dole Dual Diagnosis Unit, Department of Neurosciences, Santa Chiara University Hospital, University of Pisa, Italy; AU-CNS, Association for the Application of Neuroscientific Knowledge to Social Aims, Pietrasanta, Lucca, Italy; G. De Lisio Institute of Behavioural Sciences, Pisa, Italy.

Published: November 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare the long-term treatment outcomes of bipolar 1 heroin addicts versus heroin addicts without psychiatric comorbidities.
  • Over 3 years, patients receiving Methadone Maintenance Treatment were monitored, revealing that bipolar 1 patients had slightly better treatment retention and overall outcomes despite needing higher methadone doses.
  • Limitations included the inability to track dropouts and the influence of individual differences on treatment effectiveness, leading to unexpected results where bipolar 1 patients fared better than those without additional psychiatric issues.

Article Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the long-term outcomes of treatment-resistant bipolar 1 heroin addicts with peers who were without DSM-IV axis I psychiatric comorbidity (dual diagnosis).

Method: 104 Heroin-dependent patients (TRHD), who also met criteria for treatment resistance - 41 of them with DSM-IV-R criteria for Bipolar 1 Disorder (BIP1-TRHD) and 63 without DSM-IV-R axis I psychiatric comorbidity (NDD-TRHD) - were monitored prospectively (3 years on average, min. 0.5, max. 8) along a Methadone Maintenance Treatment Programme (MMTP).

Results: The rates for survival-in-treatment were 44% for NDD-TRHD patients and 58% for BIP1-TRHD patients (p=0.062). After 3 years of treatment such rates tended to become progressively more stable. BIP1-TRHD patients showed better outcome results than NDD-TRHD patients regarding CGI severity (p<0.001) and DSM-IV GAF (p<0.001). No differences were found regarding urinalyses for morphine between groups during the observational period. Bipolar 1 patients needed a higher methadone dosage in the stabilization phase, but this difference was not statistically significant.

Limitations: The observational nature of the protocol, the impossibility of evaluating a follow-up in the case of the patients who dropped out, and the multiple interference caused by interindividual variability, the clinical setting and the temporary use of adjunctive medications.

Conclusions: Contrary to expectations, treatment-resistant patients with bipolar 1 disorder psychiatric comorbidity showed a better long-term outcome than treatment-resistant patients without psychiatric comorbidity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2013.06.054DOI Listing

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